Construction continued during mild weather MOAM recycles, restores!

Transcription

Construction continued during mild weather MOAM recycles, restores!
A Non-Profit
Winter 2013
501(c) (3) Corporation
•
81-0437386
of[nedon
Milnole
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QUARTERLY NEWSLETTER
36094 Memory Lane Polson, MT 59860 406-883-6804 www.miracleofamericamuseum.org • [email protected]
Executive Board of Directors
Gil Mangels, President
Cathleen Wilde, VP
Nancy Pray, secretary
Ned Wilde, Treasurer
Gracia Normandeau Jones
Kendall Dupuis • Mike Maddy
Stan Cohen • Ned Wilde
Annette Schiele
Art Mangels
Advisory Director
Jim Pomajevich
Are you interested?
MOAM recycles, restores!
Occasionally visitors remark, “Why don’t you sell
or get rid of some of the junkier stuff and use the money
to restore the more meaningful items?” Well, we think
you will appreciate a more cleaned up and organized
yard.
Some items were salvaged for useful restoration or
metal sculpture parts and the rest sold to the scrap yard.
The money then goes for restoration or in some cases
obtaining displayable inventory. For example, we
recently bought a 1948 Cockshutt farm tractor. It ran,
and was pretty complete, but missing the front grille
panels. Those and hood side panels were usually the first
parts to be removed from a tractor so the farmer could
clean the dirt out of the radiator fins or service the
engine quicker and easier. Often these parts would get
misplaced or thrown away.
I remembered that the Milner family used to have
that model of tractor, so I called Clao to see if by
chance the panels from his long-a-go -sold tractor might
still survive. A very few days later, Clao actually found
them and donated them. We don’t have “miracle” in our
name for nothing. They really complete the tractor. Now
if I could just find someone that still had some grille
panels for our 1944 Oliver 70 row crop tractor.
Photos, top: New lean-to with 5 orchard tractors and
crawlers; bottom: 1948 Cockshutt farm tractor..
Construction continued
during mild weather
It seems only yesterday that I was writing the fall N.L. The
antique thermometer on the general store porch has been
posting numbers in the teens lately and radio weather reports
tell us that winter is just around the corner. We’ve been taking
advantage of the lack of snow on the valley floor to build some
lean to’s and more shelter for autos, tractors, and other
equipment. We are starting to run low on the piles of recycled
building materials, but Dupuis Lumber on Turtle Lake Rd. and
Plum Creek Plywood Division at Columbia Falls have donated
some top grade material to help us out. Jim Pomajevich donated
enough steel roofing for the largest new shelter.
MISCELLANEOUS DONATIONS
Misc. donations started coming in while the fall
newsletter was at the printers and include the
following:
Norman and Jean Swanson – 24 commemorative
and souvenir items of British Royalty dating to 1939
with an appraised value of nearly $500;
Howard Cicon, Rollins – donated an early model 16
DeLaval cream separator, early air compressor, beaver
traps, and misc. from the family ranch near Chester,
MT;
Jeri Currie – 1903 Chautauqua Elementary School
teaching scroll;
Don Bosshardt – Pyrene brass fire extinguisher,
Texaco outboard grease and oil;
Richard Lau – Town Trac Montgomery Ward
rototiller, wire stretcher, and cash for the Paul
Bunyan;
Kris Hanley – WWII – army nurse bedroll, clothing
bag and a large box of era Stars and Stripes and misc.
ephemera and photographs. Both parents, Robert
Winter and Lovella Nadrau were pre-war Ronan
residents and while they were previously married and
both based in England, were not allowed to live
together during the war.
Claudia Lancette, Helena – panoramic 8” x 36” circa
mid-1920 cycle group from Minnesota. Her uncle Ira
Enmark, owned a motorcycle shop in Minneapolis. I
count 75 cycles, the majority of them being Harleys,
36 of them with sidecars.
Larry Eslick – pot belly stove, hand-truck, and
wooden toy semi tractor and flatbed trailer;
Howard Hudson – Glacier National Park napkin
holder, early steam iron, and automobilia;
Jerry Roat – riding lawnmower.
Mike and Jeanne Dennison—Circa 1900 Large frame
bandsaw for wood and a school shop-made 16’ canoe;
Libby Heritage Museum – circa late 1960’s Camp’otel,
slightly used, but still with its original box. This will
probably go on top of our 1963 Rambler station wagon.
(See photo, above.)
Gerald Geske, Superior, MT—Experimental airplane called the
Moth Bat 2. It will be hung from the ceiling in the winter bldg;
see photos below.
Newsletter layout courtesy of
Carmine Mowbray of
MOAM Board News
The Board met in October and will be meeting quarterly in
the future. Mike Maddy has offered his office so we can receive
conference calls from those not present.
The cost of displaying and securing donated items was
discussed. While grateful for the trust in the museum and the
item(s) themselves, there can be a tremendous cash and labor
outlay preserving some items. Some donors have given money
for buildings, cases, picture frames, and other display items.
The board would like to encourage donations specifically for
the established displays. Volunteers are always welcome to
frame items or arrange displays. We ask those interested to
check with Gil on current requirements.
As the board considers the future, a pressing need will be
raising funds for a full time curator. Because Gil and Joanne
have never taken a salary we will need to increase the operating
budget to cover the cost of a curator. The endowment fund –
whose earnings we hope will perpetuate the museum for future
generations – currently is about $250,000. Only the income
from this fund can be used for operating funds. The endowment
will need to be more than $1,000,000 to fund a curator.
Perhaps you would consider a year-end gift to the
endowment fund.
Membership in the museum is open to any interested person
and has its privileges.
Annual memberships: Family $25; Sustaining $100;
Corporate $200; and Lifetime $1000. Members receive free
admission, newsletters, a 10% discount in the gift shop and
voting rights. . . Please advise when you make a donation how
you want the funds applied when you make it. Your address and
email address will be helpful for our records.
We’d love to hear from you –
Visitors, area residents and friends,
We will gladly publish your thoughts in upcoming newsletters.
We wish to thank Bob Fulton of Polson for his article about
November’s Miracle of America Activity Night. (See insert)
Please join us for December’s Activity Night!
Thursday, Dec. 12 – 6:30 p.m.
Goal in sight to cover the Paul Bunyan!
In order to preserve and make our popular Paul Bunyan
display more accessible to visitors, we have designed a
permanent shelter. We received good news last summer when
we were awarded a Montana State Community Transportation
Enhancement Program (CTEP) grant to provide about 80% of
the cost. Since then, we have been raising money for the
required local match. At this time, we are within $1,250 of
our goal. Please help us top our goal!
$1,250 more needed
to reach goal!
A huge salute of thanks
to our
New and Renewing Members:
Corporate donor—Pacific Steel, Missoula
Annual sustaining--- Rick Jennison,
Linda Lodmell Kosvic, Jim Manley,
Bobby Unser.
Family—Monte and Loie Turner.
Gil wishes to acknowledge every
membership and donation. If he forgot
you here or elsewhere in this newsletter,
please kindly let him know.
“I knead the dough”
We are committed to giving history a future for all to enjoy
and gain understanding. Can you; will you, help?
Here are a few ways you may consider helping us meet and
sustain our goals:
• Volunteer time or skills;
• Donate items for display.
• Make Gifts of • Bequests • Real Estate
• Stocks and Bonds
• Cash • Trusts
• Charitable Gift Annuities
• Securities
• Memorials
• Life Insurance Gifts
“Dough” card is from 1911
Your tax or estate planner may be able to show you ways to
take tax advantages.
Miracle of America Museum is a non-profit charitable
organization recognized by the IRS.
Gifts are tax-deductible.
Miracle of America Museum
36094 Memory Lane
Polson, MT 59860
December 12 Activity Night features Christmas movie and readings
Miracle of America Museum hosts “Activity Night”
the second Thursday of each month at 6:30 pm. It is free
to the public, although donations are accepted. If you’d
like to share cookies or other treats, they are welcome.
We’ll keep you posted on the subject matter. If you’d
like to be a part or all of a program, please call Gil at
883-6804 or 270-7895. The ideal program length is no
longer than two hours.
The December 12 program is a classic short movie
starring Jimmy Stewart and the Mormon Tabernacle
Choir in “Mr. Kruegers Christmas” followed by a poem
written during WWII by the Lake County
Superintendent of Schools. If you have a favorite
Christmas poem we invite you to share. A piano is
available if your family wants to play and sing.
My personal Christmas message to each of you is found in
Luke 2:14, the basis of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s
immortal hymn, “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day”. In it
there is the promise that the haters and wrongdoers shall fail,
and that the Christchild born in a manger , grew up to give the
ultimate sacrifice for each of us as our Savior, and only he can
bring real peace.
Merry Christmas,
Christmas card printed in 1911
Gil
Miracle of America Activity Night
– Bob Fulton
Attendees at the November 14th monthly activity sponsored by the Miracle
of America Museum were treated to a fascinating and informational
presentation by MOAM president Gil Mangels on the subject of David Polson,
the namesake of our town.
Gil alternately spoke in the first person as David and in the third person as
a commentator and lecturer on the early history of Polson. Gil described the
difficulty he had encountered in determining much of the history of the early
settlers of the Reservation since records and recollections preserved have
differing dates for births and deaths of these men and women.
Gil realistically described the challenges faced by David Polson and his
David Polson portrait
contemporaries as they sought to establish a town at the foot of the lake. By
by Carmine Mowbray
using 100 year old pictures and other documents Gil was able to “bring to life”
by request of Polsonthis early history of the white settlers on the Reservation. The original Polson
Flathead Historical
homestead, though expanded over the last 100 years, is still occupied by the
Museum for Polson’s
McAlpine family near Bird Point along the south shore of the lake. Gil then
Centennial poster.
explained the technology of early photographers in the area who have provided
much of the early documentation of life in Polson. Moving his lecture from the
auditorium to the front of the museum, Gil showed those in attendance the pictures of the city and
surrounding areas including a discussion of the “Polson Bridge” and how it evolved from a “Y” at the
Polson side of the bridge to the current single span.
If the quality of Gil’s presentation is any example of what the public can expect in future monthly
activities, it is easy to conclude that the public should block out time in their schedules to make
attendance at future events mandatory.
It was an evening that will not soon be forgotten.
Please join us for December’s Activity Night,
6:30 p.m. Thursday evening, December 12.
2014 MEMBERSHIP RENEWAL
FAMILY $___
$25 TO $99;
SUSTAINING $____$100; CORPORATE $___$200;
LIFE $____
$1000
MEMBERSHIP INCLUDES FREE ADMISSION, NEWSLETTER and DISCOUNT IN GIFT SHOP.
OTHER DONATIONS
OPERATING EXPENSES $_____
PAUL BUNYAN $ _____
MY PET PROJECT ___________________
$_____
WHERE NEEDED MOST $_____
FREEDOM TRUCK $ _____
ENDOWMENT FUND $ _____
MEMORIAL FOR (Person)___________________________ In the amount of
$______
State category_____________________
Name_____________________________________
Address _______________________________________________________________________________
Email, so we can send you quarterly Newsletters _______________________________________________
PLEASE FIND ENCLOSED MY CHECK OR MONEY ORDER OR INDICATION OF PAY PAL PAYMENT.
COMPLETE APPLICATION ABOVE, AND MAIL TO:
MIRACLE OF AMERICA MUSEUM
36094 MEMORY LANE
POLSON, MT 59860
For secure, on-line payment, use your Credit Card
and pay directly through:
Go to:
www.miracleofamericamuseum.org
to use Pay Pal.
1911 Holiday card; from Museum collection
(THEN PLEASE MAIL ABOVE APPLICATION
TO MIRACLE OF AMERICA)
LOOKING FOR A GIFT FOR THAT SPECIAL SOMEONE?
GIVE THE GIFT OF HISTORY THIS YEAR!
The gift that always fits, and needs no batteries!